Fr. 135.00

Exotic Nuclear Excitations: The Transverse Wobbling Mode in 135 Pr - The Transverse Wobbling Mode in 135 Pr

English · Hardback

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Description

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The work presented in this thesis established the existence of wobbling at low spin and low deformation in the Z~60, N~76 nuclear region.  This opens the region to further searches for wobbling and shows that wobbling is not confined to a particular quasiparticle orbital, spin or deformation. 
While deformed nuclei usually have axial shape, triaxial shapes have been predicted at low to moderate spins in certain regions of the nuclear chart (e.g. Z~60, N~76 and Z~46, N~66).  Observation of one of the fingerprints of triaxiality, chirality and wobbling, guarantees that the nucleus is axially asymmetric.  While chirality has been observed in numerous nuclei from many regions of the nuclear chart, wobbling, prior to this work, had only been observed at high spins in super deformed bands in five nuclei confined to the Z~70, N~90 region.
Additionally, this dissertation establishes a new interpretation for the wobbling phenomenon.  It shows for the first time that the nucleon aligns to the short axis, which explains the decrease in wobbling energies with angular momentum seen on this and all previous wobbling nuclei while still explaining the observed B(E2out)B(E2in) ratios.  This is a new phenomenon, which is in contrast to the increase of the wobbling energies predicted by Bohr and Mottelson.

List of contents

Introduction.- Nuclear models for high spin phenomena.- Experimental methods.- Transverse wobbling in 135pr.- Summary and outlook.- Gammasphere ring and detector information.- Inga ring and detector information.- Negative parity level and transition information.

Summary

The work presented in this thesis established the existence of wobbling at low spin and low deformation in the Z~60, N~76 nuclear region.  This opens the region to further searches for wobbling and shows that wobbling is not confined to a particular quasiparticle orbital, spin or deformation. 
While deformed nuclei usually have axial shape, triaxial shapes have been predicted at low to moderate spins in certain regions of the nuclear chart (e.g. Z~60, N~76 and Z~46, N~66).  Observation of one of the fingerprints of triaxiality, chirality and wobbling, guarantees that the nucleus is axially asymmetric.  While chirality has been observed in numerous nuclei from many regions of the nuclear chart, wobbling, prior to this work, had only been observed at high spins in super deformed bands in five nuclei confined to the Z~70, N~90 region.
Additionally, this dissertation establishes a new interpretation for the wobbling phenomenon.  It shows for the first time that the nucleon aligns to the short axis, which explains the decrease in wobbling energies with angular momentum seen on this and all previous wobbling nuclei while still explaining the observed B(E2out)B(E2in) ratios.  This is a new phenomenon, which is in contrast to the increase of the wobbling energies predicted by Bohr and Mottelson.

Product details

Authors James Till Matta
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 31.03.2017
 
EAN 9783319532394
ISBN 978-3-31-953239-4
No. of pages 112
Dimensions 164 mm x 12 mm x 240 mm
Weight 309 g
Illustrations XV, 112 p. 57 illus., 35 illus. in color.
Series Springer Theses
Springer Theses
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Physics, astronomy > Atomic physics, nuclear physics

B, Microscopy, spectroscopy, Spectroscopy and Microscopy, Nuclear physics, Physics and Astronomy, Spectrum analysis, spectrochemistry, mass spectrometry, Scientific equipment, experiments & techniques, Heavy ions, Nuclear Physics, Heavy Ions, Hadrons

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